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Brothers (2004 film)


FieldValue
nameBrothers
imageBrodre (2004).jpg
altPoster from theatrical release
captionTheatrical release poster
directorSusanne Bier
producerSisse Graum Jørgensen
writerSusanne Bier
Anders Thomas Jensen
starringNikolaj Lie Kaas
Connie Nielsen
Ulrich Thomsen
musicJohan Söderqvist
cinematographyMorten Søborg
editingPernille Bech Christensen
Adam Nielsen
studioZentropa
distributorNordisk Film
released
runtime117 minutes
countryDenmark
languageDanish
English
Arabic

Anders Thomas Jensen Connie Nielsen Ulrich Thomsen Adam Nielsen English Arabic

Brothers () is a 2004 Danish psychological thriller war film directed by Susanne Bier and written by Bier and Anders Thomas Jensen. It stars Nikolaj Lie Kaas, Connie Nielsen and Ulrich Thomsen.

The film was remade as an American production with the same title (2009), directed by Jim Sheridan.

Plot

A Danish army officer, Michael, is sent to the International Security Assistance Force operation in Afghanistan for three months. His first mission there is to find a young radar technician who had been separated from his squad some days earlier. While on the search, his helicopter is shot down and he is taken as a prisoner of war, but is assumed to have been killed in action and is reported dead to his family. His wife Sarah and younger brother Jannik both deeply mourn him, and that brings them closer together. They kiss once, but pass it off as grief and do not pursue the relationship.

Meanwhile, both the officer and a young technician are locked up in a warehouse, kept without food or water. After Michael shows them how to arm and disarm an anti-aircraft missile, his captors decide the technician is no longer useful and have Michael bludgeon him to death with a lead pipe in order to save his own life. Eventually, he is rescued and brought back to Denmark. The guilt of what he did forces him to lie and provide false hope that the technician may still be alive.

Michael becomes unstable, spiraling down into a pit of guilt and rage, and begins to threaten and abuse his wife and tear the house apart. It finally becomes necessary for the police to intervene. Michael overreacts, pointing a policeman's pistol at the officers. After Michael is taken into custody, Jannik helps Sarah begin the repairs on the house. Later, Sarah visits Michael in prison, where he breaks down and finally admits the truth about what he did in Afghanistan.

Cast

  • Connie Nielsen as Sarah
  • Ulrich Thomsen as Michael
  • Nikolaj Lie Kaas as Jannik
  • Sarah Juel Werner as Natalia (daughter)
  • Rebecca Løgstrup as Camilla (daughter)
  • Bent Mejding as Henning
  • Solbjørg Højfeldt as Else
  • Niels Olsen as Allentoft
  • as Niels Peter
  • Lars Hjortshøj as Preben 2
  • Lars Ranthe as Preben 1
  • André Babikian as Slobodan
  • Lene Maria Christensen as J. Solvej
  • as Ditte
  • Henrik Koefoed as Bartender
  • Tom Mannion as Captain David Ward

Production

The film was produced by Zentropa in co-production with companies in the United Kingdom, Sweden and Norway. It received support from the Danish Film Institute, Swedish Film Institute and Nordisk Film- & TV-Fond (Nordic Film and TV Foundation). It was primarily shot on location in Copenhagen, Denmark; Almería, Spain, was used for the Afghanistan locales.

Reception

Opera adaptation

An opera entitled Brothers, based on the story of the film, was composed by Icelandic composer Daníel Bjarnason. It was premiered at the Musikhuset Aarhus in Denmark on 16 August 2017. It was commissioned by Den Jyske Opera. The libretto was written in English by ; the director was Kasper Holten. To celebrate Aarhus as the European Capital of Culture 2017, three stage works – a musical, a ballet, and an opera all based on films by Susanne Bier – were commissioned and performed in Musikhuset.

References

| access-date = 25 February 2018 | trans-title = Cultural capital Aarhus – World premiere of the opera Brødre | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20180225101155/http://www.deutschlandfunk.de/kulturhaupstadt-aarhus-urauffuehrung-der-oper-brodre.691.de.html?dram:article_id=393745 | archive-date = 25 February 2018 | url-status = live | access-date = 25 February 2018 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130713081527/https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/brothers-2005 | archive-date = 13 July 2013 | url-status = live | access-date = 25 February 2018 | access-date = 25 February 2018 | access-date = 25 February 2018 | access-date = 25 February 2018

References

  1. (2004). "Brodre". British Film Institute.
Wikipedia Source

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